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Journal of Human Resources | 2009

Maternal Labor Supply and the Introduction of Kindergartens into American Public Schools

Elizabeth U. Cascio

Since the mid-1960s, many state governments have introduced subsidies for school districts that offer kindergarten. This paper uses the staggered timing and age targeting of these grants to examine how the childcare subsidy implicit in public schooling affects maternal labor supply. Using data from five Censuses, I estimate that four of ten single mothers with no younger children entered the work force with public school enrollment of a five-year-old child. No significant labor supply responses are detected among other mothers with eligible children. Results also indicate that at least one in three marginal public school enrollees would have otherwise attended private school.


Journal of Human Resources | 2006

Schooling and the Armed Forces Qualifying Test Evidence from School-Entry Laws

Elizabeth U. Cascio; Ethan Lewis

How much can late schooling investments close racial and ethnic skill gaps? We investigate this question by exploiting the large differences in completed schooling that arise among teenagers with birthdays near school-entry cutoff dates. We estimate that an additional year of high school raises the Armed Forces Qualifying Test (AFQT) scores of minorities in the NLSY 79 by 0.31 to 0.32 standard deviations. These estimates imply that closing existing racial and ethnic gaps in schooling could close skill gaps by between 25 and 50 percent. Our approach also uncovers a significant direct effect of season of birth on test scores, suggesting that previous estimates using season of birth as an instrument for schooling are biased.


Education Finance and Policy | 2016

First in the Class? Age and the Education Production Function

Elizabeth U. Cascio; Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach

We estimate the effects of relative age in kindergarten using data from an experiment where children of the same age were randomly assigned to different kindergarten classmates. We exploit the resulting experimental variation in relative age in conjunction with variation in expected kindergarten entry age based on birthdate to account for negative selection of some of the older school entrants. We find that, holding constant own age, having older classmates on average improves educational outcomes, increasing test scores up to eight years after kindergarten, and raising the probability of taking a college-entry exam. These findings suggest that delaying kindergarten entry, or so-called academic “redshirting,” does not harm other children—and may in fact benefit them—consistent with positive spillovers from higher-scoring or better-behaved peers.


National Bureau of Economic Research | 2013

The Impacts of Expanding Access to High-Quality Preschool Education

Elizabeth U. Cascio; Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach

President Obama’s “Preschool for All” initiative calls for dramatic increases in the number of 4-year-olds enrolled in public preschool programs and in the quality of these programs nationwide. The preschools proposed by the initiative share many characteristics with the universal preschools that have been offered in Georgia and Oklahoma since the 1990s. This study draws together data from multiple sources to estimate the impacts of these “model” state programs on preschool enrollment and a broad set of family and child outcomes. We find that the state programs have increased the preschool enrollment rates of children from lower- and higher-income families alike. Among lower-income families, our findings also suggest that the programs have increased the amount of time mothers and children spend together on activities such as reading, the likelihood that mothers work, and children’s test performance as late as eighth grade. Among higher-income families, however, we find that the programs have shifted children from private to public pre-schools, resulting in less of an impact on overall enrollment but a reduction in childcare expenses, and that they have had no positive effect on children’s later test scores.


Journal of Health Economics | 2011

Is Being in School Better? the Impact of School on Children's BMI When Starting Age is Endogenous

Patricia M. Anderson; Kristin F. Butcher; Elizabeth U. Cascio; Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach

In this paper, we investigate the impact of attending school on body weight and obesity using a regression-discontinuity design. As is the case with academic outcomes, school exposure is related to unobserved determinants of weight outcomes because some families choose to have their child start school late (or early). If one does not account for this endogeneity, it appears that an additional year of school exposure results in a greater BMI and a higher probability of being overweight or obese. When we compare the weight outcomes of similar age children with one versus two years of school exposure due to regulations on school starting age, the significant positive effects disappear, and most point estimates become negative, but insignificant. However, additional school exposure appears to improve weight outcomes of children for whom the transition to elementary school represents a more dramatic change in environment (those who spent less time in childcare prior to kindergarten).


National Bureau of Economic Research | 2009

Do Investments in Universal Early Education Pay Off? Long-Term Effects of Introducing Kindergartens into Public Schools

Elizabeth U. Cascio


Quarterly Journal of Economics | 2010

Paying for Progress: Conditional Grants and the Desegregation of Southern Schools

Elizabeth U. Cascio; Nora Gordon; Ethan Lewis; Sarah Reber


Quarterly Journal of Economics | 2014

Valuing the Vote: The Redistribution of Voting Rights and State Funds following the Voting Rights Act of 1965

Elizabeth U. Cascio; Ebonya L. Washington


UCSC Economics Department Seminars | 2005

Schooling and the AFQT: Evidence from School Entry Laws

Elizabeth U. Cascio; Ethan Lewis


American Economic Journal: Economic Policy | 2012

Cracks in the Melting Pot: Immigration, School Choice, and Segregation

Elizabeth U. Cascio; Ethan Lewis

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Nora Gordon

National Bureau of Economic Research

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Sarah Reber

University of California

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Patricia M. Anderson

National Bureau of Economic Research

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Ebonya L. Washington

National Bureau of Economic Research

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Ayushi Narayan

National Bureau of Economic Research

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